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      Indoor airborne bacterial communities are influenced by ventilation, occupancy, and outdoor air source

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          Abstract

          Architects and engineers are beginning to consider a new dimension of indoor air: the structure and composition of airborne microbial communities. A first step in this emerging field is to understand the forces that shape the diversity of bioaerosols across space and time within the built environment. In an effort to elucidate the relative influences of three likely drivers of indoor bioaerosol diversity – variation in outdoor bioaerosols, ventilation strategy, and occupancy load – we conducted an intensive temporal study of indoor airborne bacterial communities in a high-traffic university building with a hybrid HVAC (mechanically and naturally ventilated) system. Indoor air communities closely tracked outdoor air communities, but human-associated bacterial genera were more than twice as abundant in indoor air compared with outdoor air. Ventilation had a demonstrated effect on indoor airborne bacterial community composition; changes in outdoor air communities were detected inside following a time lag associated with differing ventilation strategies relevant to modern building design. Our results indicate that both occupancy patterns and ventilation strategies are important for understanding airborne microbial community dynamics in the built environment.

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          Most cited references24

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          R: A language and environment for statistical computing

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            Exposure to environmental microorganisms and childhood asthma.

            Children who grow up in environments that afford them a wide range of microbial exposures, such as traditional farms, are protected from childhood asthma and atopy. In previous studies, markers of microbial exposure have been inversely related to these conditions. In two cross-sectional studies, we compared children living on farms with those in a reference group with respect to the prevalence of asthma and atopy and to the diversity of microbial exposure. In one study--PARSIFAL (Prevention of Allergy-Risk Factors for Sensitization in Children Related to Farming and Anthroposophic Lifestyle)--samples of mattress dust were screened for bacterial DNA with the use of single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analyses to detect environmental bacteria that cannot be measured by means of culture techniques. In the other study--GABRIELA (Multidisciplinary Study to Identify the Genetic and Environmental Causes of Asthma in the European Community [GABRIEL] Advanced Study)--samples of settled dust from children's rooms were evaluated for bacterial and fungal taxa with the use of culture techniques. In both studies, children who lived on farms had lower prevalences of asthma and atopy and were exposed to a greater variety of environmental microorganisms than the children in the reference group. In turn, diversity of microbial exposure was inversely related to the risk of asthma (odds ratio for PARSIFAL, 0.62; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.44 to 0.89; odds ratio for GABRIELA, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.75 to 0.99). In addition, the presence of certain more circumscribed exposures was also inversely related to the risk of asthma; this included exposure to species in the fungal taxon eurotium (adjusted odds ratio, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.18 to 0.76) and to a variety of bacterial species, including Listeria monocytogenes, bacillus species, corynebacterium species, and others (adjusted odds ratio, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.38 to 0.86). Children living on farms were exposed to a wider range of microbes than were children in the reference group, and this exposure explains a substantial fraction of the inverse relation between asthma and growing up on a farm. (Funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the European Commission.).
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              Error-correcting barcoded primers for pyrosequencing hundreds of samples in multiplex.

              We constructed error-correcting DNA barcodes that allow one run of a massively parallel pyrosequencer to process up to 1,544 samples simultaneously. Using these barcodes we processed bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequences representing microbial communities in 286 environmental samples, corrected 92% of sample assignment errors, and thus characterized nearly as many 16S rRNA genes as have been sequenced to date by Sanger sequencing.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Indoor Air
                Indoor Air
                ina
                Indoor Air
                BlackWell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0905-6947
                1600-0668
                February 2014
                24 May 2013
                : 24
                : 1
                : 41-48
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Biology and the Built Environment Center, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Oregon Eugene, OR, USA
                [2 ]Department of Biological Sciences, University of Quebec Montreal, QC, Canada
                [3 ]Energy Studies in Buildings Laboratory, Department of Architecture, University of Oregon Eugene, OR, USA
                [4 ]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona Tucson, AZ, USA
                [5 ]Santa Fe Institute Santa Fe, NM, USA
                Author notes
                J. F. Meadow, Biology and the Built Environment Center, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403 USA, Tel.: +406-370-7157, Fax: +541-346-2364, e-mail: jfmeadow@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                10.1111/ina.12047
                4285785
                23621155
                d0263ab5-3520-4a28-8e3c-d5c4a3b7e4d3
                © 2013 The Authors. Indoor Air published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 17 February 2013
                : 18 April 2013
                Categories
                Original Articles

                Health & Social care
                bioaerosol,airborne bacterial community,natural ventilation,built environment,indoor microbial ecology

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